Closing up the corner
When walking down College Avenue by the football stadium, there are so many food options: Subway, Snooze, Panda Express. But there are only a few clothing stores and this number is about to be even lower.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of statepress.com - Arizona State Press's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
When walking down College Avenue by the football stadium, there are so many food options: Subway, Snooze, Panda Express. But there are only a few clothing stores and this number is about to be even lower.
With the the first semester of my freshman year coming to an end, I feel like I haven’t changed a lot since August. As much as I hate to admit it, I feel like my first few months at college have been exactly as I expected, different from high school but still more of the same.
Despite the constant flow of political news, campaigns to raise voter registration awareness and ease of registering to vote college age students are still the largest range of people unregistered to vote. Zack McCutcheon and Andrew Sypher are hoping to change just that.
Weekly chess society meetings are a relaxed environment. Classical music plays from a Pandora station while a number of chess games are ongoing. Members focus on the game before them, occasionally breaking their concentration to share a laugh with their opponent.
For most students, the time before 9 a.m. consists of a warm shower, a few outfit changes and, if they’re lucky, a standard cup of coffee to start the day. However, for a particular group of students, the early morning hours consist of an entire day’s worth of physical training and at least an hour-and-a-half of a workday. They’re not just early morning risers – they’re scholars, they’re athletes, they’re leaders – they’re the ASU ROTC students
A 12-year-old girl picks up her bead kit and begins to string little black beads into a bracelet -- a gift for her mom. As her mom wore it, the compliments poured in and she began to realize this could be more than just a craft.
Ditch the flip-flops and load up on water. Hiking season is right around the corner and preparation is the key to a successful hiking trip, meaning you don't have to get airlifted off the mountain.
When it comes to planning a party, society has been conditioned to go to the first party store we see and purchase the first prepackaged themed party-in-a-box we find.
Maybe you’re feeling alone because you have a severe case of FOMO. Maybe you’ve moved across the country to jumpstart a new life but are struggling to make connections. Maybe you’re feeling frustrated because your cubicle neighbor was promoted over you. Maybe you’re someone who over analyzes relationships, or maybe you’re just a woman who needs better balance to her life.
Over 30 times in the past two years, Elizabeth Vasquez, president of Theta Nu Xi Multicultural Sorority, has traveled to Mexico to volunteer in orphanages.
Communication freshman Itzel Pedregon has used writing her entire life as a way to express herself, whether it was through school assignments, poetry or articles.
Marshmallows: a commonly forgotten childhood treat typically bought at grocery stores, added to hot chocolate and used as an essential ingredient in making the ever-so-loved s’mores.
The art, the culture, the neighborhoods, the relationships and the people who live, work and play there shape what it means to be a great city.
Lights, music, and dancing equal more than a party; it creates a healthy lifestyle.
She wakes up to the sound of a new email. Her inbox is flooded with show confirmations, event invitations and editors’ questions. She’d arrive at the office to confirm the seating and prioritize the editors by seniority when it came to ticketing.
You might have experienced a sudden burst of light in your peripheral vision while trotting around Arizona State University’s Tempe campus recently. The momentary glimmer could have been the reflection of one of the 23 pieces in ASU’s public art collection restored this past summer during the most comprehensive conservation effort in the collection’s history. Some of the works, which hadn’t been restored in nearly a decade, were in desperate need of restoration.
Balloon Balloon, a transcontinental managed venture startup created by ASU graduate students, is changing the status quo of parent-caregiver communication.
It’s nearly impossible to walk through campus without seeing a student wearing Greek letters. Whether it’s on a t-shirt, a tote bag or a baseball hat: Greek letters are everywhere.
A woman can put tattoos on her body, tan her body, pierce her body, dress her body however she likes, but when it comes to what is growing in her uterus, some believe she does not have the right to decide what happens.
She receives her assignment along with her partner for her latest project. She arrives at her destination: a block in downtown Phoenix. Upon her arrival, she sees an open, abandoned field with parking meters and chain link fences.
This website uses cookies to make your experience better and easier. By using this website you consent to our use of cookies. For more information, please see our Cookie Policy.